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Six Branches Family Acupuncture

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Six Branches Family Acupuncture

  • Home
  • About
    • About Six Branches
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What We Put On Our Skin Matters

March 22, 2012 Naomi Skoglund L.Ac.
Screen Shot 2012-03-19 at 4.52.08 PM

Screen Shot 2012-03-19 at 4.52.08 PM

As a friend once told me, after finding out that I rarely used lotion or oil on my skin, "Your skin is your biggest organ, you have to keep it healthy".

She was right, of course.  Our skin is the largest organ we have.  It is our great protector - safeguarding our bodies against bacteria and viruses, helping us hold on to water and keeping us warm, or cooling us off when we're hot.  It houses one of our most basic senses - touch - which is so important that babies who don't have skin contact with other mammals fail to thrive and can even die.  Our skin also nourishes us by taking the light from the sun and producing Vitamin D (really more of a hormone than a vitamin) which is important for immunity, bone health, digestive health, and more.  In Traditional Chinese Medicine, the skin and the spaces between the skin and muscle are governed by the Lung organ system, and this is where the defensive Qi of the body (similar to the body's innate immunity) circulates.

As I started to look for moisturizers to put on my skin, I was shocked to learn more about all the ingredients that go into cosmetics and personal care products.  Recent research in the news about the link between parabens and breast cancer, as well as the connection between hair relaxer use and the risk of uterine cancer in African-American women, has brought the issue of safe cosmetics to the fore again.

Unlike with foods and drugs, the FDA does not pretest the personal care products turned out by the $30 billion cosmetics industry.  Instead, it relies on the companies making the products to ensure the ingredients they use are safe.  The Environmental Working Group of Washington, D.C. recently petitioned the Food and Drug Administration to issue warning labels on 356 personal-care products that contain ingredients that have not been thoroughly tested.   Lucky for us, the Environmental Working Group has created a database where you can check you personal-care product for toxicity!>

Here's a few tips they offer for reading the labels of your skin care products:

  • Choose Fragrance-Free - Two years ago, the International Fragrance Association published a list of ingredients that its members reportedly use to make fragrances for consumer products. Of the 3,163 chemicals listed, several stand out as particularly toxic: phthalates, octoxynols and nonoxynols. (Phthalates are potent hormone disruptors linked to reproductive system birth defects in baby boys. Octoxynols and nonoxynols break down into persistent hormone disruptors, as well.) Look for these words as well: "FRAGRANCE," "FD&C," or "D&C." which companies can list in lieu of the actual fragrance ingredients.

  • A short list of other ingredients to avoid are:

    • Words ending in "paraben"

    • ingredients that start with "PEG" or have an "-eth" in the middle (e.g., sodium laureth sulfate)

    • DMDM hydantoin

    • Imidazolidinyl urea

    • Methylchloroisothiazolinone

    • Methylisothiazolinone

    • Triclosan

    • Triclocarban

    • Triethanolamine (or "TEA")

Phew!  That's a lot to remember when you're in the store.  We can group a few of them together - if you can remember to 'Tri' to stay away from the "methyl-ones", that takes care of half the list.  And once again, you can look up products on EWR's cosmetics database to find out their relative toxicity.  Here's a two minute video from EWR about commonly found ingredients in cosmetics and personal-care products:

In Western Integrative Medicine Tags beauty, environmental working group, health, skin, toxins
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